All four district judge races in Northampton County ended in clean sweeps tonight with the leading vote-getters winning both the Republican and Democratic primaries.

Douglas Schlegel held a commanding lead in the Wind Gap area race. Richard Yetter won in the Wilson Area, Todd Strohe in the Bangor area and James Narlesky in north Bethlehem, according to unofficial results.

Schlegel, a Bushkill Township police officer, carried significant leads in both primaries over the other five challengers. He was one of four former or current police officers in the race, along with challengers Andrew Medellin, Michael Potope and Kerri Temos-Tollinger.

The other challengers were Plainfield Township Supervisor Joseph Lerch and Barbara Fitzgerald, an assistant district attorney in Monroe County.

“I think he ran a good race. He put a lot of flyers and phone calls in,” Medellin said of Schlegel’s campaign. “Doug’s a very good guy. There wasn’t any kind of tension or anything like that” in the campaign.

Schlegel did not respond to emails seeking comment. He will replace Adrianne Masut, who did not seek re-election.

Yetter, of Wilson Borough, swept both ballots over challengers Shana Restucci and Rhonda Elias in the Wilson area race, according to unofficial results. As a lawyer, Yetter is not required to take the qualifying course to become a district judge.

Yetter did not return phone calls seeking comment, but one of his opponents said he had the race wrapped up early in the evening.

“I think it pretty much is (over),” Elias, a project manager for a supply company in Bethlehem, said shortly before 9 tonight. “He deserves it, I guess. He worked hard for it.”

Yetter will fill the seat vacated last year by Michael Koury, who became a Northampton County judge in 2010.

Strohe soundly defeated Roseto Councilman Craig DeFranco for the Bangor district judge race. Strohe, who did not return a phone call seeking comment, would enter his third term as district judge next year.

Narlesky successfully defended his seat as the district judge for the Hanover Township and Bethlehem area. Voters decided to give Narlesky a second term over Samuel Royer, a 35-year-old former Marine. While the numbers were relatively close on the Republican ballot, Narlesky, 61, overwhelmingly defeated Royer on the Democratic ticket.